How can i import a pdf in indesign? If i drag and drop a pdf, only the first page of pdf shows up with really bad resolution and even the vector in it gets pixelated.
Use File>Place command, and check Import Options in same window where you select PDF to import....
Then you have extra window before you place PDF, there you can choose which pages you want to place...
Never mind the poor quality, if you print your layout or export it, quality is OK. InDesign shows you low res display version of placed images and PDFs etc by default.
You can also change the quality of display image by right-clicking the image/PDF and choosing Display Performance > High Quality. Then you will see the content of PDF as you would see it in Adobe Reader....
arjun2 wrote:
okay..how can i ungroup this pdf?
Do you mean place a page of a PDF and then edit individual elements as you could in the program that made the PDF? If that's what you want, that's not the way it works. The page of the PDF is all one image, but there are a few things you can do that will be sort-of like ungrouping the PDF.
One would be to save the PDF with layers. This can be done (for example) if you created the page (from which the PDF was exported) in InDesign and checked the Create Acrobat Layers checkbox when exporting to PDF. When placed in InDesign, you can switch the layers on or off either when placing, or from Object>Object Layer Options after the PDF has been placed.
Another thing you can do is to place several copies of the same PDF and crop out portions on the different copies. This doesn't work if objects overlap, though, unless overlapping objects are on different layers that you switch off. Text won't be editable, but objects can be resized or moved, if that helps.
There is also PDF2ID, which can convert a PDF to an editable InDesign document. I haven't used this, so I can't say how successful it is, but I expect that you will need to tweak the newly-created ID file to make it look like the PDF to one degree or another.
arjun2 wrote:
yes i wanna ungroup various parts of pdf and edit it you're right. can it be done in illustrator maybe?
Maybe, but Illustrator is not a "general purpose" PDF editor and a whole lot of things can go wrong.
Realistically, it's best to edit the content that went into the PDF in the application that made the PDF initially, then make a new PDF.
I've never used PDF2ID, either, but it is intended to open a PDF file to convert to InDesign, not to work with a placed PDF in an existing ID file. It might, however, allow you to open the PDF as editable objects, then copy/paste those objects into your other file.
Adobe - Feature Request/Bug Report Form
But don't hold your breath waiting. ID is a layout application, and the only kind of placed content you can edit is text. That's not likely to change.
i have adobe acrobat. . that's a good idea. anyway,how can i make the adobe pdf place the pages respective to their postions. example i have 91 page pdf , if i import it i have to place pages one by one. is there an option it places those 91 pages of pdf on my blank pages of indesign in one go?
an even better script is at InDesignSecrets » Blog Archive » Zanelli Releases MultiPageImporter for Importing both PDF and INDD Files
Bob Levine wrote:
Look in your scripts panel. You'll find a script for placing mulitpage PDFs.
Bob
thank you sir. is there a page that lists down all the default scripts avaialable and what each script does?
Peter Spier wrote:
an even better script is at InDesignSecrets » Blog Archive » Zanelli Releases MultiPageImporter for Importing both PDF and INDD Files
Thank you peter ![]()
You can write down the default scripts available by Indesign by yourself on a piece of paper and to know what these scripts do :-
In the script panel , right click on any script and click , "Edit Script"
The Extend toolkit will open up wherein the first few line describe what does the script do (It is mentioned under "Buildinfo" )
Found something while reading tought to share , here is the link for the sample scripts and what they do :-
http://help.adobe.com/en_US/indesign/cs/using/WS0836C26E-79F9-4c8f-815 0-C36260164A87a.html
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